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University of Leeds. / 53.80722°N 1.55167°W / 53.80722; -1.55167. The University of Leeds is a public research university in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It was established in 1874 as the Yorkshire College of Science.
In 1955 Gray was appointed a Lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Leeds. He was promoted to Reader in 1959 and to a personal chair as Professor of Physical Chemistry in 1962. He became Head of the Department of Physical Chemistry on the resignation of Professor Lord Dainton in 1965. His research interests included combustion flame and ...
Sir Timothy O'Shea, computer scientist and Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the University of Edinburgh; George Porter, chemist, Nobel Prize winner and President of the Royal Society (Chemistry, 1941) Dan Quine, computer scientist; Anya Reading, geophysics lecturer at the University of Tasmania (PhD Geophysics 1997) Malcolm Richardson, mycologist
Philip Kocienski. Part I : The reactions of Di-t-butylcyclopropenyl cations with nucleophiles. Philip Joseph Kocienski FRS (born 23 December 1946 [3]) is a British organic chemist. He is an Emeritus Professor at the University of Leeds. [4]
University of East Anglia. University of Leeds. Website. Official website. John Maurice Campbell Plane, FRAS, FRSC, FRS is a British atmospheric chemist, currently Professor of Atmospheric Chemistry at the University of Leeds. His research investigates planetary atmospheres using a range of theoretical and experimental techniques.
Grigg was appointed to a lectureship in organic chemistry at Nottingham in 1965 and remained there until 1974 when he became Professor of Organic Chemistry at Queen's University, Belfast. [4] He was appointed Professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of Leeds in 1989. He retired from Leeds in 2001 when he was made Emeritus Professor.
Nora Henriette de Leeuw FRSC CChem MAE FLSW is the inaugural executive dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences at University of Leeds. Her research field is computational chemistry and investigates biomaterials, sustainable energy , and carbon capture and storage .
physicalsciences .leeds .ac .uk /staff /202 /professor-fiona-meldrum. Fiona C. Meldrum is a British scientist who is a Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Leeds [1] where she works on bio-inspired materials and crystallisation processes. [2] She won the 2017 Royal Society of Chemistry Interdisciplinary Prize.